Still, for a faith that is very comfortable with the idea that the Divine can (and does) appear in a variety of forms and manifestations, I could find few cases of religious sightings (in food or other common non-religious objects). What gives?

Do you think Hinduism supports the idea of religious sightings? Do you know of any religious sightings involving Hindu deities or imagery? Or do you think the whole thing is just a case of the fertile and faithful imagination running wild?

????
This is neither related to acai cleanses, the subject at hand,
nor even an example of beat poetry, or spoken (written?) word…
So again I say:
????

Previous Posts

Is Asana Religious?Last week, I received an inquiry from a Christian theologian interested in showing that “the postures of Yoga” (asana) are directly tied to Hinduism and thus, cannot be easily incorporated into daily life by Christians. While the origin of yoga is undoubtedly tied to the Hindu sacred texts, th

India's Holy Men by Joey L.I just ran across these stunning images of Holy Men by photographer Joey L. The initial set of images are of Indian sadhus living in the holy city of Varanasi...and they are absolutely breathtaking.
http://www.joeyl.com/personal-galleries/holy-men-2/

The Idea of a Constructed Hindu IdentityThe following piece was written by my friend Raman Khanna, who is also a member of the Hindu American Foundation's Executive Council.
“Hinduism was invented recently.”
“The word Hindu is problematic.”
“It’s not accurate to speak of Hinduism, only Hinduisms.”
More than a decade has

Advice on kindnessMy yoga teacher sent me the below link to George Saunders' convocation speech at Syracuse University for the class of 2013. It's worth a read:
http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/31/george-saunderss-advice-to-graduates/?src=me&ref=general&_r=0